Some functionality has been disabled
To experience the best that the Church of England website has to offer, you need to enable JavaScript in your browser's settings. Turnon.js provides guidance on how to activate JavaScript for your particular browser.
A Christian presence in every community
106 results found for 'Environment programme'
The Church of England's national environmental programme exists to enable the whole Church to address — in faith, practice, and mission — the issue of climate change and care of creation.
The electricity bills of a busy town-centre church have drastically reduced thanks to the installation of solar panels as part of a net zero programme.
A church hall where it was ‘too cold to craft’ has been transformed into a warm space – thanks to a net zero renovation funded by community grants.
Learn more about the journey we've taken so far in addressing the Church Commissioners’ historic links with African chattel enslavement.
A church on the edge of the Cotswolds is set to reduce its energy bills after replacing an unreliable oil-fired boiler with electric under-pew heaters, thanks to a grant from the Church of England’s Net Zero Programme.
A church in the heart of one of the country's most deprived areas is bringing local people together and helping them with their mental health and wellbeing - thanks to the launch of a series of environmental projects.
A church in London’s famous theatre district has found inspiration from another church as it seeks to reduce its carbon emissions.
A vicarage in a deprived area of Bristol has been transformed by the installation of solar panels, insulation and an air source heat pump.
With a budget of around 17 pence per head – 20 cents – the Brussels community kitchen works hard to pack as much nutrition as possible into each meal it cooks for refugees while getting maximum value for money.
A busy city church has saved thousands of pounds on its energy bills thanks to making a number of small changes to reduce its carbon footprint and help care for God’s creation.
The summit should make good on commitments to tackling climate change, writes Rt Revd Graham Usher, lead Bishop for the environment.